Imralu wrote: ↑02 Apr 2024 20:08
Another odd thing about having a language from an entirely different biome is stuff like "ribbit". There are no frogs that sound anything like that here, just "gronk gronk gronk", "reeeeeeeeee", "wark" and "ree-kit-kit" ... some that just make a loud toneless pop, and one with the best onomatopoeic name of anything ever: the scarlet-sided pobblebonk (also called the northern banjo frog).
To be fair, these onomatopoeias (really want to write 'onomatopoeiae' there, just for the extra vowel...) vary massively even between neighbouring languages. The sound of things like frogs is hugely subjective, given that they're made in a totally non-human way. "Ribbit" is kind of like "ticktock" - a sound your brain imposes on the sound, rather than something present in the sound, even though once you're used to the idea of frogs making that sound it's hard to hear anything else.
Frogs go "ribbit" in England, but in Germany apparently they say "quak-quak" (the same sound as a duck), and in Hungary they say "brekeke". Speaking of ducks, apparently Danish ones go "raprap", while Danish horses go "vrinsk". Germans and Spanish believe that cockerels begin and end their crowing with high front vowels!
Meanwhile, everyone agrees cows go something like "moo", but they usen't to - English cows used to go "low", which is why mooing is still known as "lowing" in archaising texts.
Another one is that I just grew up knowing all the names of trees that don't grow here, like "oak", "larch", "elm", "maple", "poplar", "willow", "juniper", "fir", "pine", "spruce", "beech". Some of these have been reused for the names of things here. We've got a few things called pines that are conifers, but not particularly closely related to northern hemisphere species and some things called XXXXX cedar, etc., but our most common street trees are various figs, various palms, jacarandas, poincianas, Queensland kauri (more closely related to our "pines" than northern hemisphere pines are), silky oak (not an oak!), leopard tree, blue quandong, flame tree, blueberry ash (not an ash!). When I moved to Germany, I didn't know any of the trees and occasionally someone told me and I was like "Ah, that's what a [tree whose name I knew in both English and German] looks like!" and I could never remember them. Like, when learning German, I just committed to memory "Fichte = spruce ... whatever the fuck a spruce is!"
Anyway, I don't know if there are any cuckoos with particularly distinctive calls in the Americas, but if they don't have the common kind found in Afro-Eurasia that makes the eponymous call, native words for them are likely nothing like "cuckoo".
To be fair, 99% of people have no idea what any of those English trees look like anyway. Other than willows, obviously, but even then most people would only recognise a Chinese willow, not a European one. Even I have no idea what a spruce is exactly, except that (from the context of its softwood, its scent, and the location of spruce forests) I believe it's a conifer of some sort.
[I could recognise a distinctive large English oak, probably, but not with a huge amount of confidence. Definitely not some of the weirder oaks varieties we have. I could guess a larch by its colour, if it was larch-coloured (but might guess other things that colour were larches too). I have almost no idea what an elm is, partly because conventional elms are virtually extinct here now and only weird mutant and engineered elms still exist; from the context of art and literature I have very vague sense of the shape of idealised Roman elms, but don't know the details. Maples are large or boring acers - I automatically guess anything with a sharply palmate leaf is either an acer (if small or red) or a maple (if big and not red), but where sycamores fit in I've no idea. Poplars I know are tall, but I don't really know about them; when I was young I used to think cypresses were poplars. I believe trees near French roads are often poplars, and poplars sometimes have clumps in in their branches. I can now have a stab at a goat willow because there's one near my house that I looked up, but if it's an osier I've got no chance. Junipers... I think I'd guess that something was a juniper if it looked like a yew but wasn't. (obviously I can recognise a yew, everyone knows what a yew is like... at least, a conventional English yew, Irish yews can be different). Firs, pines, spruces and cedars are conifers; buggered if I know the difference. Except that if it's very dense I think it might be a fir? But some things that aren't dense are also firs. Beeches are just trees with no distinguishing features - you can spot them in autumn, though, because they retain their brown leaves, I think. Copper beeches are copper, so they're easy. I used to get beeches confused with birches, but now I reason that anything with laterally-peeling bark is a birch, if it's not something exotic and australian.
Others you missed are birch (the bark), cherry (flowers?), apple (late-flowering cherry?), magnolia (grandiflora (leaves, flowers) and solangeana/stellata (no leaves, flowers)), plane (non-laterally peeling bark, but only unambiguous with young urban trees), lime (no idea), holly (obvious), hornbeam (SOME hornbeams have a distinctively muscular appearance, but not all), blackthorn (sodomy non sapiens) and hawthorn (dirt cherry flowers)... and although it's not native there's quite a bit of escaped sumac around here too, which is very distinctive. Oh, and horse and sweet chestnuts (but actually looking it up apparently sycamores and limes have similar-looking fruit!). And hazel (can be distinctive in habit).
I don't know any of your trees, except palms. And I've heard things called "flame trees", but I think that refers to a lot of different plants.]
It's not even a recent thing, though. "Sycamore" refers to at least three different European trees that are unrelated and have nothing in common - one's a fig, one's a plane, and one's an acer! Likewise, the things we call lime trees aren't anything like the trees we get lime fruit from!